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John Bowlby Attachment Theory Essay

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John Bowlby was a psychoanalyst who felt that a child’s mental health and behavioral problems could be accredited to early childhood attachments. Bowlby’s evolutionary theory of attachments says that before children are born they are genetically pre-programmed to generate attachments with others. Infant’s behaviors such as crying, smiling or laughing stimulate responses from their caregiving adults. Bowlby suggests that the cause of attachment is not food/nutrition but they need for care and comfort. Typically the infant will only bond with one parent and form one primary attachment that will be the basis for all future attachments. If there is something disrupting that attachment, it can affect future attachments with others. Bowlby’s theory …show more content…

If attachment deprivation happens, consequences may include: decreased intelligence, increased behavioral problems, increased aggression, depression and an affectionless demeanor meaning the infant once older, is unable to show concern or emotion for others. The individual may act impulsively without thinking of consequences or outcomes of their actions (McLeod, 2009). The fourth point Bowlby makes is that a short term separation from the infant to its primary attachment individual, continuing to use the example of mother, may lead to distress in the infant. There are 3 stages of distress. The first stage is protest. This is where the infant cries or screams when the mother leaves. The infant will attempt to stop the mother by crying, screaming or grasping. The second stage is despair. This is where the infant will stop screaming/crying though they are still upset. The infant may be attempted to be comforted by others but the infant will ignore or refuse these attempts at comfort. The last stage is detachment. If the mother stays away long enough, the infant will start to engage with the individual’s around it. They may reject their mother’s comfort or presence once she returns or may show signs of anger towards the mother (McLeod,

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